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monologue
(redirected from monological)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Legal, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.02 sec.
monologue, an extended speech by one person only. Strindberg's one-act play The Stronger, spoken entirely by one person, is an extreme example of monologue. Soliloquy is synonymous, but usually refers to a character in a play talking or thinking aloud to himself, giving the audience information essential to the plot. The most obvious example is Hamlet's "To be or not to be …" soliloquy. The dramatic monologue is a lyric poem in which one person speaks, reporting to a silent listener what other characters say and do, while providing insight into his own character, e.g., Browning's "My Last Duchess" and T. S. Eliot's "Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock." Interior monologue is a narrative technique meant to reproduce a character's thoughts, feelings, and associations in the untidy fashion in which they flow through the mind. The Molly Bloom section at the end of James Joyce's novel Ulysses is the most frequently cited example of perfect use of the device.
monologue
1. a long speech made by one actor in a play, film, etc., esp when alone
2. a dramatic piece for a single performer


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More dialogical than monological, The Role of a Lifetime ends up highlighting distinct bodies of work and visions: Narkevicius's audio interviews with Watkins, drawings by Mindaugas Lukosaitis (filmed by Audrius Kemezys, who catches Lukosaitis's hand), and archival footage of Brighton filmed by Geoffrey Cook in the '60s.
But for others (particularly in the wake of the Israeli response to Palestinian aspirations) it will be clear, as it is to me, that Pagis's disturbing paean to deathly silence can not be easily confined within the monological thrust of national or officially sanctioned commemorative narratives, and indeed transcend any efforts to contain them.
Hoxby shrewdly avoids the monological approach of a number of critics who dwell on Satan's association with trade and empire.
 
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